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  2. City of Dreams (casino) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Dreams_(casino)

    City of Dreams (Chinese: 新濠天地, Portuguese: Cidade dos Sonhos) is a casino resort in Cotai, Macau. Built, owned and managed by Melco Resorts & Entertainment, the resort, also known as CoD or CoD Macau, opened on 1 June 2009. [3] [4] Described as a "mega-casino" by The Guardian, [5] in 2020 City of Dreams was the third-largest casino in ...

  3. Melco Resorts & Entertainment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melco_Resorts_&_Entertainment

    Melco Resorts owns a number of integrated casino resorts, having launched Altira Macau in 2007, City of Dreams Macau in 2009, [2] City of Dreams Manila in 2015, [8] Studio City Macau in 2015, City of Dreams Mediterranean in 2021, the largest casino-resort in Europe [9] and City of Dreams Sri Lanka in 2024. [10] It also operates the Mocha Clubs ...

  4. Morpheus (hotel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morpheus_(hotel)

    Morpheus is a neo-futurist luxury hotel in Macau, Special administrative regions of China that is operated by Melco Resorts & Entertainment. [2] Opened in June 2018, TIME describes it as "the world’s first free-form exoskeleton-bound high-rise: a grid of steel envelops 40 stories of glass with a fluidity inspired by Chinese jade carving."

  5. Melco International Development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melco_International...

    [8] In May 2007, [5] the venture launched the casino resort Altira Macau (Crown Macau) [11] in Taipa [5] for $1.45 billion. [8] Melco Crown then launched City of Dreams Macau in 2009 for $2.4 billion, [11] with Melco PBL owning 66% of the development [38] and appointing Hyatt International to operate two hotels at the location. [6]

  6. The House of Dancing Water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_House_of_Dancing_Water

    The production was located at the City of Dreams resort in Cotai, Macau. The show ran for 90 minutes, and featured acrobatic elements and original acts, with a stage that transformed into different sets. Over 90 gymnasts, circus artists, dancers, divers, actors, and motorcyclists were featured in the show.

  7. Gambling in Macau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gambling_in_Macau

    Then there was a 9.1% decrease in 1999, probably due to internet gaming. After the handover of Macau from Portugal to China, the SAR released gambling licenses to other companies to eliminate the monopoly played by the STDM. In 2002, the government signed concession contracts with two Macau gaming companies, Wynn Resort Ltd. and Galaxy Casino.